gaped at me long enough to satisfy their curiosity, they went back into a coma again. At three minutes past three, the door jerked open and a youngish man, tall, thin, with one of those high-executive chins and a crew cut, wearing a black coat, grey whipcord trousers and a black tie came as far as the doorway.
The six businessmen all straightened up, clutching at their despatch cases and pointed the way a setter points when he sights game.
His cold, unfriendly eyes ran over them and stopped at me.
“Mr. Brandon?”
“That’s right.”
“Mr. Creedy will see you now.”
As I got to my feet, one of the men said, “You’ll pardon me, Mr. Hammerschult, but I have been waiting since twelve o’clock. You said I would be the next to see Mr. Creedy.”
Hammerschult gave him a bleak stare.
“Did I? Mr. Creedy thinks otherwise,” he said. “Mr. Creedy won’t be free now until four o’clock. This way,” he went on to me, and, leading the way down the passage, he took me into a smallish lobby, through two doors, both lined with green baize, to another massive door of solid polished mahogany.
He rapped, opened the door, looked in, said, “Brandon’s here, sir.”
Then he stood aside and waved me in.
II
T he room reminded me of the pictures I had seen of Mussolini’s famous office. It was sixty feet long if it was an inch. Placed at the far end between two vast windows, with a fine view of the sea and the right arm of Thor Bay, was a desk big enough to play billiards on.
The rest of the room was pretty bare apart from a few lounging chairs, a couple of suits of armour and two heavy, dark oil paintings that could or could not be original Rembrandts.
Behind the desk sat a small, frail-looking man, his horn glasses pushed up and resting on his forehead. Apart from a fringe of grey hair, he was bald and his skull looked bony and hard. He had a pinched, tight face: small features and a very small, tight mouth. It wasn’t until I encountered the full force that dwelt in his eyes that I realized I was in the presence of a big man.
He gave me the full treatment, and I felt as if I were under X-rays and that he could count the vertebra of my spine.
He let me walk the length of the room and he kept the searchlight of his gaze on me. I found I was sweating slightly by the time I reached his desk. He leaned back in his chair and eyed me over the way you would eye a bluebottle fly that has fallen in your soup.
There was a long pause, then he said in a curiously soft, effeminate voice, “What do you want?”
By then, and by his reasoning, I should have been completely softened up and ready to fall on my hands and knees and rap my forehead on the floor. Okay, I admit I was slightly softened, but not as soft as he would want.
“My name’s Brandon,” I said, “of the Star Inquiry Agency of San Francisco. You hired my partner four days ago.”
The thin, small face was as deadpan as the back of a bus.
“What makes you imagine I would do that?” he asked.
From that I knew he wasn’t sure of his ground, and he was going to probe first before he took the hoods off his big artillery.
“We keep a record of all our clients, Mr. Creedy,” I said untruthfully. “Sheppey, before he left our office, recorded that you hired him.”
“Who would Sheppey be?”
“My partner and the man you hired, Mr. Creedy.”
He placed his elbows on his desk and his fingertips together. He rested his pointed, bony chin on the arch thus formed.
“I must hire twenty or thirty people a week to do various unimportant jobs for me,” he said. “I don’t recall any man named Sheppey. Where do you come in on this? What do you want?”
“Sheppey was murdered this morning,” I said, meeting his hard, penetrating gaze. “I thought you might want me to finish the job he was working on.”
He tapped his chin with his fingertips.
“And what job would that be?”
Here it was: the dead-end. I knew sooner or later it might come
Justine Dare Justine Davis